Serial fq-6

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Serial fq-6 Page 24

by John Lutz


  “You saw his face?”

  “No. It was dark and he was wearing a balaclava. I could just see his eyes and mouth.”

  “So you couldn’t identify him for sure.”

  “No. Guess not…”

  Weaver’s voice was wavering. She was obviously getting weaker.

  “We’re done here,” Rose said.

  “No,” Weaver said. She tried to grasp Quinn’s arm but couldn’t move her own. “I scratched his face hard under the balaclava. I remember that for sure. I did damage. Then I smelled ammonia-”

  “Ammonia…”

  “That’s it,” Rose said, and reached for the valve on the IV tube.

  “He cleaned under my fingernails,” Weaver said. “I could feel the scraping…”

  Rose readjusted the plastic valve.

  “He might be our Skinner,” Weaver said.

  “Skinner?” Rose asked. “The animal who’s killing those women?”

  Quinn nodded. “The very same.” He looked down at Weaver, whose eyes were closed again. “Nancy?”

  Weaver’s breath evened out and her features relaxed.

  “She’s resting,” Rose said, “as she should be. And if I ever find again that you’ve tampered with medical equipment in a patient’s room, I’ll sic the authorities on you like a pack of mad dogs. There’ll be no more asking me to break the law for you. And you a policeman yourself.”

  “I-”

  “Don’t bother to deny it, please. I’ve heard enough lies.” She sighed loudly again. It seemed to be her signature way of expressing herself. “Have you got a card, Quinn?”

  He looked at her.

  “A business card, man!” Another trailing sigh.

  Quinn dug his wallet from his pocket and handed her one of his Q and A business cards.

  Rose tucked it in a pocket of her nurse’s uniform. “When the patient comes around again and you can count on her actually making sense, I’ll straightaway give you a call.”

  “Thanks, Rose. I’ll have someone standing guard on Weaver here at the hospital. If you notify him, it’ll be the same as notifying me.”

  “I hope you catch the murdering psychopath,” Rose said.

  “We will,” Quinn assured her. He moved toward the elevator, and Rose walked alongside him. At the elevator doors, they paused. Quinn smiled his surprisingly beatific smile and gave Rose’s elbow a gentle squeeze. “You did the right thing, dear.”

  “I was told those very words once after extramarital sex. It was a lie then and it is now.”

  53

  Edmundsville, Missouri, 2006

  “You almost fell on your you-know-what,” May Ann said.

  Beth had stumbled during an underarm turn on the crowded dance floor. May Ann had been the last of the group to arrive, and was still playing the chaste Catholic schoolgirl all grown up. Beth knew that was going to change in a big way after a few more drinks. Already May Ann was beginning to laugh too loud and bat her eyelashes.

  The place was the 66 Road House, though it wasn’t anywhere near the new or old Route 66. The music was Hank Williams. There was sawdust on the dance floor, and the garage band that played the 66 was loud and almost on the beat. Beth was dancing with her friend May Ann Plunkert. The two women’s other friends, Gloria Trish and Sami Toyner, were at the table near the Stag Beer sign, sipping bourbon and water on the rocks. That and scotch and beer were pretty much what the 66 served. A drink with a parasol would probably result in a fight.

  In the time she’d worked at Arch Manufacturing, Beth had made some good friends. Lots of single women were employed there, and there were plenty of cliques and enough ways to spend time if you weren’t too tired after work. Beth had fallen in with a group of about a dozen who called themselves the Sole Sisters. They weren’t particularly wild, but they had their fun.

  Beth hadn’t made any close male friends, but she’d gone out on the occasional date. Nothing worked for her romantically, or for the men passing through her life. It was difficult for her to become involved with someone. The men she’d dated who were interested in more than sex broke off the relationship after learning she had a fourteen-year-old son. Baggage. People Beth’s age had baggage, and that was the way some of these jerks saw Eddie.

  Beth truly loved Eddie. Tonight he was on a camping trip with his best friend Les and Les’s father. Eddie was turning into quite the outdoorsman. He especially loved fishing.

  Since she’d left Hogart, things had worked out well. She had a job, a house, a life. Most important of all, Beth had her son to raise. She had all that, and she liked her work well enough at Arch, but now and then she found herself thinking there had to be more in life.

  Like Wayne Westerley. Had she been an idiot to break off her affair with Wayne? A part of her didn’t want to leave him, but she knew that if she was going to find any happiness and get Eddie away from the fallout of what had happened to her, she had to leave Hogart.

  The town wasn’t much to leave, anyway, a blink-of-the eye business loop off the Interstate and a dozen tree-lined side streets featuring houses that would have been historic but for the fact they were cracker-box shacks on the day they were built.

  From time to time she did miss Wayne, not only their sexual involvement but the quiet times on her front porch, the leisurely walks along Trout Lake. He’d helped her to heal, and it wasn’t his fault that the healing could never be complete.

  Westerley had driven to Edmundsville to see her several times after she’d moved, but she’d stopped that, too. It was as if he brought a part of the past with him, and it was a past Beth needed to escape. Eddie was the finest and only part of her earlier life she wanted to carry into the future.

  Beth spent her hours at Arch working on the line, helping to manufacture orthopedic blanks for shoe inserts. Some of the blanks would be packaged as is, in three sizes, for distribution to retail outlets. Others would be custom-shaped to the prescription orders of orthopedic doctors. Those were the jobs that took expertise, and of course they paid better. Beth looked forward to making that transition one of these days, when she’d obtained enough seniority. Of course there were the more physically demanding warehouse jobs, which paid well, but Beth saw the physical toll those took on women and wanted no part of any of them except maybe forklift operator. But that was a high seniority position and would be years away even if she had a chance at it.

  She almost slipped and fell again, and heard May Ann giggle. Too much sawdust on the floor.

  The music stopped, which was fine with Beth. She was winded and perspiring, and a lock of hair dangled down on her forehead and kept getting into her eye. She and May Ann started back across the dance floor toward the table, which required picking their way among two-steppers waiting for the next song and was almost a dance in itself. A guy in a white Stetson sat down on stage in front of the band and began strumming a regular acoustic guitar and singing. He sounded something like Hank Williams. Beth caught a glimpse of him and he even looked like Hank Williams.

  Someone tapped her on the shoulder and she turned around.

  The man smiling at her also was wearing a white cowboy hat. He was average height, handsome, and built wiry like Hank Williams, and damned if he didn’t resemble Williams in the face even more than the guy onstage. The same sort of dark-eyed sweetness in his lean features. He had a slender, slightly long nose and a sharp chin with thin lips. Dark eyebrows that were sort of angled up at the bridge of his nose to give him a puppy-dog inquisitive look. Not the greatest features, she thought, but they did hang together well.

  “I like that,” he said.

  Beth wasn’t sure she wanted to flirt after only one drink. “And what would that be?”

  “The way you’re sizing me up. Shows you’re interested.”

  “I was thinking you look a little like Hank Williams.”

  “I been told that. ’Fraid I can’t sing like him.” He grinned. Good teeth. “I could maybe sound better than that guy onstage, though.”

>   Beth smiled. “I just bet you could,” she said sarcastically. There was something about this guy. She felt comfortable with him, but maybe in a sisterly way. Of course, that could change. Maybe…

  No. He’ll be just like the others.

  “Now, that’s a tone of voice I don’t like,” he said, touching her arm and guiding them away from May Ann and over to the edge of the dance floor, which was getting crowded, what with all the fellas taking advantage of a slow dance. “I don’t like that little frown of yours while you’re looking at me. I ain’t that bad a singer. I cross my heart.”

  He moved in close to her. As if it was the most natural thing in the world, they were dancing. Barely moving, but dancing.

  “I’m Lincoln Evans,” he said. “Friends call me Link, so I’m ‘Link’ to you.”

  “Beth Colson.”

  “Now we know each other,” he said, and his embrace tightened.

  Link wanted Beth to leave the 66 with him that night, but she explained to him that she was there with friends. She even led him over by the hand and introduced him to the others.

  “We work out at the plant,” she said, a little embarrassed but also pleased by the envious glances from her friends.

  He touched the brim of his hat and smiled down at them all, as if his next move would be to sit at the table and regale them with tales of the rodeo. Instead he guided Beth back onto the dance floor. He was holding her even closer now.

  “You all work at some plant?” he asked.

  “Arch Manufacturing. We make insoles.”

  “No kidding?” Like it was the most interesting job in the world.

  “Shoes,” Beth said.

  “What? Did I step on yours?”

  She laughed. “Insoles for shoes.”

  “Oh. Yeah, I figured that.”

  Was he being sarcastic? Beth didn’t know how to reply. They had struck the wall of first-date awkward conversation.

  “It’s not very interesting work,” she said. “So what do you do? No, let me guess. You’re a cowboy. A real one.”

  “Unemployed like a real one,” he said. “What I been doing is driving around Missouri in my truck, looking for work.”

  “What kinda work?”

  “Any. And I mean any. Jobs are scarce out there.”

  “So I heard.” They danced silently for a while. “Listen,” she said. “I’ve got a little influence at Arch.” Very little. “I can at least let you know when there’s an opening and put in a word for you.”

  He looked down at her as if he could hardly believe her. “You’d really do that for me?”

  That and more. “Sure. Why not?”

  “Because you barely know me.”

  “I’ve got a good feeling about you, Link.”

  “Like I’ve got about you.” They danced slower and slower, until they were standing locked in a simple embrace, and then he kissed her.

  Beth changed her mind about leaving the 66 with her friends. After the music stopped, she made her way over to the table and told May Ann and the others they could go without her. She had her own car, anyway, and thought she might leave early.

  She could feel their eyes on her as she walked out of the 66 with Link Evans.

  They sat in his dusty and dented pickup truck for a while and kissed and talked and kissed some more. Then he pulled her close and she felt his hand move up beneath her blouse and onto her right breast. His fingers danced over her nipple and then gave a slight pinch.

  God! He knows what he’s doing.

  As he began unbuttoning her blouse she realized that he’d felt her sudden involuntary resistance.

  He released her immediately.

  “I don’t want to rush things, Beth. Not with you.”

  “I’m sorry. It’s just that. Well…”

  “If you’re not in the mood, that’s reason enough for me to wait.”

  “There’s something you oughta know.”

  “What? You’re married?”

  “No. Divorced.”

  “So?”

  “I’ve got a fourteen-year-old son.”

  He sat back as if he needed a little distance to take her all in at a glance. “No kidding?” He reached for a pack of cigarettes on the dashboard and lit one, coughed, and flipped the cigarette out the window. It made a glowing arc in the night, like a miniature shooting star. “Gotta quit those damned things.”

  “His name is Eddie.”

  “Well, Eddie’s a lucky boy, with you as his mom.”

  “What about you, Link? Are you lucky?”

  He laughed. “Well, I gotta admit I just now was trying to get lucky.”

  “You know what I mean. Does what I just told you change things between us?”

  He seemed puzzled, but only briefly. “Changes this. I’m very much looking forward to meeting Eddie.”

  They kissed again, and she felt his fingers tugging at the material of her blouse. This time she helped him with the buttons.

  Later, in Link’s motel room just off the Interstate, Beth lay wondering what she and Link had just begun. He was a wonderful, gentle lover, and he seemed more than pleased with her.

  But Beth was worried. What was happening to her, and to Link, would take a measure of commitment. She had a hunch he was capable of it, but she wasn’t so sure about herself.

  Somebody clomped around in the room upstairs and then was quiet. The only sound in the night was the distant whine of trucks on the highway, downshifting to make the turn on the dark Interstate instead of heading straight for Edmundsville. Beth thought it might be the loneliest sound she’d ever heard. It almost made her cry.

  Hank Williams, what have you started?

  Six weeks later they were married in Las Vegas and spent a week in luxury at the MGM Grand. Most of the time Beth felt she was trespassing. Link spent an hour at a slot machine and won almost a thousand dollars. He kissed her and told her it meant their marriage was starting off lucky.

  The rest of their time there they didn’t gamble. That was the only way you could beat a casino, Link said. Beth agreed with his decision, figuring if they stopped gambling, their luck couldn’t change.

  54

  New York, the present

  Whoever answered the phone at Sweep ’Em Up told Quinn that Jock Sanderson was at an uptown YMCA with the rest of a cleanup crew, making fresh again an auditorium where an author had spoken last night about his book on how television pundits were poisoning American society.

  “I think I read that one,” Quinn said, and told the woman on the phone that if Sanderson happened to call, it would be best if she didn’t mention her and Quinn’s conversation.

  “He’ll be too busy with his mop and push broom to call,” the woman said. “Anyway, once the daytime cleanup crews are out on the job, nobody calls here except maybe people like you.”

  “Did Sanderson work last night?”

  “No. It was his night off. That’s why he’s on this daytime job. It’s cheaper for our clients if we clean during the day, and venues like the YMCA don’t hold events so often that they’re in a big rush to clean up afterward.”

  “How long’s it usually take to clean up after something like an author lecture at a YMCA?”

  “You mean what time will Sanderson get off work?”

  “You’re ahead of me,” Quinn said.

  “They didn’t start all that early, so it’ll probably be pushing five o’clock. You want to talk to him, you might be able to catch him when he’s on his lunch break around noon. It’d be better for him if the boss and the rest of the crew didn’t know the police were visiting him.”

  Quinn told her that was a good idea, but the moment he hung up he left to drive to the YMCA where Sanderson was working today. He wasn’t in the mood to give a damn what Sanderson’s boss or his fellow employees thought about the law questioning him.

  The YMCA was a modern gray and glass cube on a block of old buildings being renovated. Quinn was directed by an Arnold Schwarzenegger look-alike
in a too-tight shirt to the auditorium.

  After walking down a hall with glass windows looking in on a swimming pool, an indoor track, and a room full of people working out on exercise equipment, he pulled open a wooden door with a pneumatic closer and stepped into a small lobby. He used an identical door to enter the auditorium.

  It was dim and, even without people in the seats, it didn’t seem all that large. It smelled musty, in the way of empty auditoriums. Quinn estimated it would accommodate about five hundred people. He wondered what kind of turnout the author of the TV pundit book had spoken to last night. He guessed it would depend on whether the speech was free.

  A man and woman in gray work coveralls were moving things from the small stage to an area behind some curtains. Two others, both men, were using long-handled push brooms to sweep the gray painted concrete floor between the rows of seats. One of the broom pushers fit Sanderson’s description. Quinn walked to the end of the row he was sweeping and waited until Sanderson looked up and noticed him. He held up his ID and motioned for Sanderson to come to him.

  As if grateful for the break, Sanderson propped his broom between two seat backs. He sidled toward Quinn in a way that suggested the seats were occupied and he was worried about stepping on toes. Quinn saw why. The seats hadn’t been raised yet on that end of the row to allow room for sweeping beneath them.

  Sanderson stopped and stood in front of the end seat, looking expectantly at Quinn. Up close, Sanderson looked shorter than he did at a distance, but he was solidly built-well set up, as old cops used to say. Quinn was disappointed to see that there were no scratches on his face. Weaver had clawed the man who attacked her, and had done so hard enough to come away with his flesh beneath her fingernails.

  Quinn identified himself.

  “I already talked to another cop-officer,” he said. “Pearl somebody or other.”

  “That’s all right,” Quinn said, as if Sanderson had been seeking reassurance. “I’m here about something else. A woman was badly beaten last night, not far from where you live.” He watched Sanderson’s reaction. He’d know the beating took place a long walk or subway ride away from his apartment.

 

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